Tips & Tricks to Win: Stop Escaping. Start Dominating.

You’re Not Here to “Participate”

60 minutes. 1 room. 0 excuses.

Mediocre teams escape. Great teams destroy rooms.

Here’s how to stop being “almost escaped” and start being legendary.


1. Pee First

Nothing ruins a clutch escape like a full bladder at minute 52. Hydrate strategically.

2. Assign Roles (Yes, Actually)

RoleResponsibility
The FinderTouches everything. Checks under tables, inside books, behind frames.
The OrganizerHolds found objects. Creates a “used” pile. Prevents the raccoon situation.
The ReaderActually reads the instructions. The MVP.
The Math PersonHandles numbers, sequences, patterns.
The KevinKeeps moral high. Bless him.

Pro tip: Don’t tell Kevin he’s Kevin.

3. Phone in Locker. Brain in Game.

If you’re scrolling during briefing, you’ve already lost.


1. First 5 Minutes: The Scatter Method

Everyone touches everything.

Not aggressively. Methodically.

  • Open drawers
  • Move objects
  • Check magnets
  • Shake suspicious items
  • Look for hidden compartments

Goal: Inventory every clue, lock, and object in the room.
Result: Your organizer now has 14 items to catalog. Good.

2. Communicate Like Your Life Depends On It

❌ “I found something.”
✅ “I found a silver key with a red handle. It has the number 7 engraved. I’m trying it on the desk drawer.”

❌ “What’s the code?”
✅ *”I need a 4-digit code for a blue lock. Has anyone seen anything with 1-9-8-7 or colors?”*

Context wins games.


Number Locks

  • Try the obvious first: Room number, year on poster, 1234 (you’d be surprised)
  • Look for patterns: Math problems, sequences, color-to-number conversions
  • Check the back: Of paintings, clocks, mirrors

Word/Letter Locks

  • Find the theme: Is this a pirate room? Use pirate words
  • Count things: Books, windows, skulls = letters in the alphabet
  • Look for circled letters: Someone took time to highlight this

Directional Locks (↑ ↓ ← →)

  • Check floor tiles
  • Look at clock hands
  • Notice how objects are arranged

Hidden Objects

  • Magnets are everywhere
  • UV lights reveal things (wave it around like you mean it)
  • Books never sit flush (pull them)

Stuck on one puzzle for 10 minutes?

Stop. Ask for a clue.

This isn’t a pride competition. The room has 6-10 puzzles. You’re losing time on one while others wait.

Good teams solve puzzles.
Great teams know when to abandon them.


✅ Do:

  • Over-communicate. “I’m working on the red box” prevents 3 people touching the same lock.
  • Spread out. Don’t cluster. Cover ground.
  • Report dead ends. “I tried 1975 on everything. It’s not that.”
  • Celebrate loudly. Every solved puzzle = dopamine. Use it.

❌ Don’t:

  • Solve alone in silence. This isn’t a solo mission.
  • Hoard objects. If you’re not looking at it, pass it.
  • Second-guess the solver. They cracked it. Move on.
  • Blame Kevin. Actually, blame Kevin. But do it after.

Minute 50: Panic or Poise?

Winning teams:

  • Assign one person to watch the clock
  • Narrate everything (no time for silent thinking)
  • Try obvious combinations you ignored earlier
  • Ask for the final clue. No shame.

Losing teams:

  • Blame each other
  • Re-check locks they already opened
  • Argue about who lost the key

The “3-Touch” Rule

Every object should be:

  1. Found
  2. Examined
  3. Either used or passed

Nothing sits untouched for >2 minutes.


The “Wall of Truth”

Dedicate one visible surface (whiteboard, window, phone notes) to:

  • Codes you’ve tried
  • Patterns you’ve spotted
  • Items you can’t use yet

Visual memory > Brain memory.


The “Pair & Share” Method

Split into 2-3 pairs. Each pair solves one puzzle path.
Check in every 5 minutes.

Parallel processing wins races.


The “What Haven’t We Touched?” Reset

Every 15 minutes, stop. Scan the room.

That vase. That rug. That ceiling tile.

You haven’t checked it yet. Go check it.


❌ Force locks. If it doesn’t click, wrong key/code. Stop.

❌ Put things back where they found them. Once it’s out, it’s out.

❌ Assume it’s broken. It’s not broken. You missed something.

❌ Stand in corners. Contribute or communicate. Pick one.

❌ Say “I knew that.” No you didn’t. Kevin didn’t either.


Before you enter:

  • Used bathroom
  • Phones locked away
  • Roles loosely assigned
  • Kevin informed he’s “morale captain”

First 5 minutes:

  • Every surface touched
  • Every object inventoried
  • Every lock identified

Throughout:

  • Talking constantly
  • Asking for clues when stuck
  • Passing objects immediately
  • Celebrating small wins

Final 5 minutes:

  • Still trying
  • Not fighting
  • Not crying
  • (Crying is allowed. We don’t judge.)

The “SEO Specialist Made Me Write This” Section

Escape room tips and tricks Vietnam: You’re reading them.

How to win escape rooms: Communicate, organize, don’t hoard objects.

Escape room strategies for beginners: Read the beginner guide first. Then read this.

Best escape room players HCMC: Could be you. Book a room. Practice.

Escape room teamwork tips: Share everything. Blame no one. (Except Kevin.)


One More Thing

Winning isn’t about escaping.

It’s about:

  • That moment someone connects two unrelated objects
  • The collective scream when the final lock clicks
  • Post-game gathering where you replay every mistake

Escaping is the trophy.
But the game is the experience.


Ready to stop reading and start winning?

Find Your Winning Room
Assemble Your A-Team
Kevin, Read This Before We Play

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